The Link Between Vitamin C And Optimal Immunity

November 2015

By Chad Robertson

In 1937, the Nobel Prize in Physiology was awarded to Albert Szent-Gyorgyi for his research on vitamin C. At the time, vitamin C was a rare commodity and could only be extracted from adrenal glands or massive amounts of orange juice.

The human body does not produce vitamin C. It must be obtained from outside-the-body sources. Water-soluble vitamin C is quickly excreted.1 That’s why it makes sense to supplement daily with vitamin C to ensure the body has the protection it needs.

Aging individuals tend to have lower levels of vitamin C circulating in their blood stream and immune cells.2,3 This can lead to impaired
immune function.4,5

While vitamin C helps maintain tissue and speed wound healing, an overlooked strength is its impact on boosting immune function. As you
will read in this article, people with common diseases have lower vitamin C blood levels than healthy individuals.

With the growing body of data about the role that plant-based nutrients play in healthy aging, we sometimes forget about how much
documentation exists in support of vitamin C, a nutrient found in small concentrations in certain plant foods.

New evidence is corroborating what scientists long ago advocated relating to the need for humans to maintain optimal vitamin C status.

The Importance Of Vitamin C

Vitamin C deficiency has been associated with frequency and duration of colds, along with immune system defects.6 While colds aren’t usually
dangerous in themselves, they can lead to pneumonia and other respiratory diseases, especially for aging individuals.7 Colds can be an early
indicator of gaps in immune function that could leave one vulnerable to a cascade of serious infections.

A deficiency of vitamin C broadly affects the various key aspects of immune function, which include the innate system we are born with, the adaptive system that develops from infancy to young adulthood, the cells that kill invaders, the cells that coordinate those attacks, and even the
production of antibodies that fight known infections.

As a result of vitamin C’s wide-ranging impact on the immune system, a deficiency could leave us vulnerable to infections.5 A weakened immune
system caused by low vitamin C levels can make any infection more serious. This danger becomes more ominous in older adults, in whom the phenomenon of immunosenescence (the aging of the immune system) already heightens risk.8

There are multiple causes of insufficient vitamin C. Aging is one major cause of lowered vitamin C levels.2,3 The concentration of vitamin C in
immune cells decreases with age, partly the result of an increasingly oxidative environment that consumes vitamin C. This can lead to damage to DNA,
proteins, and fat molecules needed for normal immune function.4,5

Stress is another major trigger for reducing vitamin C levels, leaving the affected individuals vulnerable to infection at precisely the time that stronger
immune support is needed.4,5,9

In some remarkable human findings, low vitamin C blood levels have been associated with a number of common human diseases.5,10 The table
below shows higher plasma vitamin C levels in healthy individuals compared to those with serious diseases, most notably cancer and sepsis.

TABLE: Vitamin C Levels Fall In Multiple Disease States

Healthy Vitamin C Range is 61-80 mmol/L

Vitamin C In Disease States

Mean Plasma Vitamin C Level (micromol/L)

Diabetes

42
mmol/L

Gastritis

46
mmol/L

Pancreatitis

33
mmol/L

Pneumonia

31
mmol/L

Cancer

< 24
mmol/L

Trauma or sepsis (overwhelming infection)

10
mmol/L

Arthritis

27
mmol/L

A healthy vitamin C level is considered to be between 61 and 80 micromol/L. Those afflicted with serious diseases have
much lower vitamin C levels. It is likely that the inflammation and oxidative stress caused by some of these
diseases contributes to this reduced vitamin C since it will rapidly be used up quenching free radicals. It’s also possible that lower levels of vitamin C
contributed to the development or progression of some of these disorders.

Why The Immune System Depends On Vitamin C

One of the most important functions of vitamin C is to support and energize the body’s immune system. Immune cells have active vitamin C transporter
molecules embedded in their membranes that actively pump the vitamin into the cells when more vitamin C is required.5,11

For example, during times of inflammation or infection, those transporters ramp up their activity to provide sufficient vitamin C to the cells’ inner
workings, causing cells to attain levels up to 100-fold that of the plasma level. This is why blood levels of vitamin C drop during times
of disease or infection (see Table above).5,11

This can create a potentially vicious cycle in which, just when you need extra vitamin C, your body’s stores are depleted. This also makes it especially
important to increase one’s intake of vitamin C when sick.

The content of vitamin C within immune cells is closely related to those cells’ activity, especially in the case of specific cells that engulf and destroy
infecting organisms (phagocytes) and of those that recruit, organize, and direct other immune cells (T-lymphocytes).11

Fortunately, you can improve your immune system’s function by supplementing with vitamin C.4,6,8,12 The recommended daily allowance of vitamin C
is around 90 mg per day. For optimal immune function, many experts now recommend supplementing with 1 gram (1,000 mg) of vitamin C daily in addition to a diet rich in fruits and vegetables.13

Human studies have shown that this amount of vitamin C can not only reduce the duration and severity of the common cold—but can reduce the incidence of
developing a cold as well. Not all common cold studies produce consistent results. This means more than vitamin C alone is needed to combat common colds,
such as using the right dose of zinc acetate lozenges as soon as cold symptoms manifest.

What You Need To Know

Vitamin C Supports The Immune System

Older adults are at ever-increasing risk of serious infections or cancers as their immune systems age.

An intact immune system relies upon many layers of protection from multiple cell types and a host of immunologically active signaling molecules.

The function of those specialized cells and molecules is being increasingly found to depend on adequate supplies of vitamin C in the body.

Roughly 23% of Americans have vitamin C depletion, causing their immune systems to not function properly.44

Studies show that doses of vitamin C at 1,000 mg per day can effectively restore function to myriad components of the immune system.

New studies confirm that vitamin C supplementation at 1,000 mg per day shortens the duration and mitigates the severity of colds, while
also preventing colds from developing, especially in those with low vitamin C levels.

Take a 1,000 mg per day supplement to optimize your immunity and potentially lengthen your life.

Reduce The Duration And Severity Of Colds

One of the best-known uses of vitamin C is in the prevention and treatment of the common cold.14 While for young people a cold is little more
than a nuisance, in older adults, colds can herald the onset of serious bacterial infections such as pneumonia or bronchitis, both of which increase the
risk of premature death.

There is no shortage of research demonstrating that vitamin C can reduce symptoms and shorten duration of the common cold.4,15 Studies show that
vitamin C supplementation can reduce the duration of colds by anywhere from 5 to 21%. 15

Vitamin C supplementation has also been shown to significantly reduce the severity of cold symptoms. And in older people who
require hospitalization for pneumonia and chronic bronchitis, even a dose of just 200 mg per day was shown to reduce the clinical severity
of the illness.4

Emerging Areas Of Vitamin C Importance In Human Health

This article primarily considered the role of vitamin C in supporting the immune system, particularly in aging or stressed individuals. There is growing
support, however, for use of vitamin C in these other areas as well:

Diabetes: Diabetes induces powerful oxidant stress throughout the body, leading to inflammation and loss of function. Studies now show that vitamin C status may
influence the incidence of type II diabetes, the accelerated cognitive decline of diabetics, the anxiety, depression, and stress experienced by diabetics,
and the risk of atrial fibrillation in diabetics.45-48

Cardiovascular disease: Heart disease and stroke have many causes, but oxidant damage and inflammation lead the pack.49-53 Studies now show vitamin C improves
endothelial function (function of the active lining of blood vessels that controls blood flow and pressure) and potentially other areas of cardiovascular
medicine.54-56

Anemia: There is evidence from animal studies that vitamin C can prevent the kind of anemia that arises from excessive iron, which can be seen in older adults. 57

Periodontal disease: Bleeding gums and tooth loss were common symptoms of scurvy that were readily reversed with vitamin C supplementation. Today’s scientists are demonstrating
a role of vitamin C in preventing less obvious, but still important causes of tooth loss in older adults, such as gingivitis.58

Osteoporosis: Vitamin C is an absolute requirement for normal formation of bone proteins, and preliminary studies are showing the potential of the vitamin in preventing
bone loss and fractures related to osteoporosis.59,60

Vitamin C Reduces Incidence Of Colds

While the evidence demonstrating the ability of vitamin C to reduce the duration and the severity of colds is clear, the question of whether vitamin C
supplementation could also reduce the incidence (rate of occurrence) of colds has been fiercely debated.16 Newer
studies using higher doses of vitamin C show that vitamin C can, in fact, reduce the incidence of colds.

Studies using 1,000 mg or more have shown that vitamin C reduces cold incidence by a remarkable 50% among people
undergoing heavy stress, such as soldiers and athletes.4,15,17 These studies found that the people who had the lowest dietary intake of vitamin
C had the greatest benefit.

In 2014, a study of vitamin C published in the journal Nutrients provided definitive evidence that vitamin C supplementation can
reduce the incidence of the common cold in otherwise healthy people with chronic stress or obesity.6 The study included 18- to 35-year-old men
who had vitamin C levels of less than 45 micromol/L (61 to 80 is considered adequate). The study lasted
eight weeks, and scientists recorded scores on a physical activity scale and tracked the occurrence of cold episodes.

During the study, 85% of placebo recipients experienced a cold compared with just 47% of supplemented subjects, a
statistically significant difference and a risk reduction of 45%.6

Reduction in cold duration was also significant in the supplemented versus the control group, with supplemented subjects experiencing an average of 3.2 (59%) fewer days with cold symptoms than placebo subjects. Intriguingly, supplemented subjects’ physical activity
scores also rose by 40% compared with placebo recipients, strongly suggesting that supplementation was correcting hidden symptoms of
vitamin C depletion, such as fatigue and malaise.

Even more impressive, at least three controlled studies also show that vitamin C supplementation can reduce the incidence of pneumonia by as much as 80%.15 This is a crucial finding for older adults since the death rate for
elderly people with pneumonia exceeds 16%, even with antibiotic treatment, highlighting the urgency of prevention.18,19

Vitamin C And Immunity: Details From Laboratory Studies

The aging of the immune system (immunosenescence) can leave older individuals vulnerable to infection and disease that wouldn’t be an issue for
younger people.20 Laboratory studies indicate that vitamin C can restore an aging immune system to that of younger individuals.

An abundance of laboratory studies show that vitamin C can boost immune function, particularly in older people. One particular study demonstrates this
perfectly. White blood cells from elderly people typically perform poorly in response to stimulation by foreign material (antigens). However, a study
published in the International Journal of Immunopharmacology showed that incubating these white blood cells overnight in a solution enriched with
vitamin C restored the performance levels of these cells to that of normal cells from younger people.8

In fact, vitamin C produces beneficial effects on virtually all of the immune system’s cells.

Natural killer (NK) cells. These “hit men” of the immune system move in on infectious and malignant targets that have been identified as foreign by other immune system components.
Like other immune cells, NK cells’ function declines with aging.21 Detailed scientific studies show that NK function improves in the
presence of adequate vitamin C, and declines without it.22-24 Vitamin C helps NK cells track and destroy tumor cells as well by reducing the
shielding effect of platelets (blood clotting cell fragments) that would prevent NK cells from destroying them. This effect may help to prevent cancers
from producing deadly metastases.23

Neutrophils
are the main immune system cell for fighting bacterial infections. Neutrophils engulf invading organisms, then destroy them with powerful blasts of
short-lived oxygen free radicals. Vitamin C supports many aspects of neutrophil function, aiding in their ability to chase down bacterial targets and
improving their ability to engulf and kill such targets.25,26 Since the bacterial killing process creates potent oxidation products, neutrophils
would destroy themselves in short order without ample vitamin C, which scavenges up the dangerous oxidizing molecules once they have done their work to
destroy the bacterial cell.25-27 A study published in the Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology showed that when human volunteers took an oral dose of 1,000 mg or more of vitamin C, neutrophils performed more vigorously than those of unsupplemented subjects.28 Improved function of neutrophils in the presence of adequate vitamin C is so evident that clinicians have begun to use vitamin C at 1,000 mg per day doses for people with chronic granulomatous disease, a disorder in which neutrophils lack proper killing
ability once they have ingested bacteria.26,29 Similar improvements in neutrophil performance have been shown in the much larger population of
people with asthma, another condition in which neutrophil impairment can worsen patients’ clinical status.26

Lymphocytes
are immune system cells that produce antibodies (called B-lymphocytes) and coordinate with other immune cells to guide them
towards threats needing destruction.8,30 When they detect such an incipient threat, lymphocytes rapidly reproduce in a proliferative response
that is enhanced in the presence of vitamin C. In older adults, that proliferation is impaired, but vitamin C treatment restores them to youthful levels of
function.8,31 Similar enhancements of lymphocyte proliferation have been demonstrated by supplementing aging laboratory animals with vitamin C,
which also boosts lymphocytes’ ability to track down threats.32
Diabetes, like aging, impairs the production of lymphocytes and the functioning of T-lymphocytes.33,34 However, supplementing diabetic rats with
vitamin C pushed lymphocyte production from 57% of that of controls to virtually 100% of control values, essentially creating “nondiabetic” immune cells within a living diabetic body.35

Antibodies
are noncellular components of the immune system that help identify and destroy invading threats and cancerous cells.36 Vitamin C benefits this
portion of the immune system by raising levels of three main classes of antibody immunoglobulins: IgA, which protects against infections
mainly on mucosal surfaces, such as the respiratory and digestive tracts, IgG, which provides long-term protection in the bloodstream, and IgM, which is the earliest immunoglobulin to appear in blood in response to threats.37-40 Blood levels of antibodies and other
protective molecules rose significantly when volunteers took 1,000 mg doses of vitamin C daily for 75 days, demonstrating the effect in
humans.41

Human Studies Confirm Vitamin C’s Immune Benefits

There is now copious evidence that vitamin C benefits people with impaired immune function, whether that impairment is the result of disease or simply of
aging.

In patients with frequent skin infections, for example, who had known impairment in neutrophil tracking and killing of microorganisms,
vitamin C was as effective as a powerful immune-regulating drug, levamisole, at improving neutrophil function and producing long-lasting
remission.42 But unlike levamisole, which produced severe side effects causing 8% of subjects to drop out of the study, no
patients in the vitamin C arm dropped out. Similar improvements in neutrophil function, and dramatic clinical recoveries, were seen in patients with
recurrent furunculosis (boils), on a dose of 1,000 mg per day.43

This same dose of vitamin C was found to boost immune cell functions in women who were an average of 72 years old.28 In this study, lymphocyte
and neutrophil function improved in all members of this group, including those who were healthy, those with major depression, and those with coronary heart
disease. This study demonstrated the far-reaching effects of vitamin C in the aging body.

Summary

Few people realize the importance of having ample supplies of water-soluble vitamin C in their body.

Without regular ingestion, ascorbic acid (vitamin C) levels drop rapidly and can produce hidden effects, long before major signs of scurvy appear.
Otherwise unexplained fatigue, malaise, or “mind fog” may in reality be symptoms of vitamin C depletion.

All major immune system cell lines function at their peak with ample vitamin C supplies. With inadequate intake or plasma levels, those cells are less able
to detect, track, and kill invading organisms or precancerous cells. That means that vitamin C depletion can leave one vulnerable to dangerous infections.

New studies are helping to confirm that vitamin C supplementation can reduce duration and severity of the most prevalent respiratory infection, the common
cold, and makes it less likely one will catch a cold in the first place.

Given the health risks associated with adults who develop pneumonia after a cold, prevention with adequate vitamin C (1,000 mg and higher daily doses) looks more promising. This dose, greater than what can fit into most multi-nutrient formulas, will assure
you are obtaining sufficient vitamin C to emulate studies documenting improved immune function, protection against the common cold, and other age-related
disorders.

If you have any questions on the scientific content of this article, please call a Life Extension® Wellness Specialist at
1-866-864-3027.

Finck H, Hart AR, Jennings A, Welch AA. Is there a role for vitamin C in preventing osteoporosis and fractures? A review of the potential underlying
mechanisms and current epidemiological evidence. Nutr Res Rev. 2014 Nov 21:1-16.

Additional Information

This supplement should be taken in conjunction with a healthy diet and regular exercise program. Individual results are not guaranteed and results may vary.

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